NEW YORK (AP) -- After LeBron James won his second NBA championship this
year, he talked about the improbability of his journey - ascending to world fame despite growing up
with challenge after challenge in the inner city.

Now James plans to explore that theme as part of
Survivor's Remorse, a new show he's developing with Starz. While he won't star in the
half-hour sitcom, he'll be one of the executive producers of the show, which will explore the lives
of two men from the streets who attain fame - one is an NBA star and one is not - and how they deal
with friends and families in the wake of that success.

"I think the main thing for me is, first of all, making it out of a place
where you're not supposed to. You're supposed to be a statistic and end up like the rest of the
people in the inner city - (and) being one of the few to make it out and everyone looking at you to
be the savior," the Miami Heat superstar said in a phone interview last week.

"When you make it out, everyone expects for - they automatically think that
they made it out and it's very tough for a young, African-American 18-year-old kid to now hold the
responsibility of a whole city, of a whole community. I can relate to that as well," said James,
who was 18 when he came to the NBA and is now a 28-year-old veteran.

James is developing the show with his longtime friend and business partner,
Maverick Carter; Tom Werner, the producer behind classic shows like
Roseanne and
The Cosby Show; and actor Mike O'Malley, who will be an executive producer and is the
show's writer. Paul Wachter will also be an executive producer.

"It's definitely not an autobiographical series about my life or LeBron's
life; it's fictional characters living in a fictional world," said Carter, before adding with a
laugh: "LeBron is actually too famous, he would screw the show up if I tried to make a show about
him."

The show is based in North Philadelphia instead of Akron, Ohio, where the two
are from: "More people can relate to it," explained Carter of Philadelphia.

Still, Werner said the inspiration for the series started in part with
conversations he had with Carter, and later James, about their lives.

"I think the juxtaposition of great wealth - and then you go back to your
home in Akron and the neighborhood that you come from - the chasm is a fairly big one, and I think
it's some very interesting story material," he said.

Werner, James and Carter have worked together since 2011. They are part of
Fenway Sports Group, and Werner is the chairman of the organization, which combines sports, media
and entertainment. Werner said they were "delighted" to bring the show, which is in development but
has no firm timetable to air, to Starz.

Starz CEO Chris Albrecht said the show would be different for the channel,
whose original programming includes the recently launched
The White Queen.

"It's a contemporary piece, which we've been trying to find," he said. "But
mostly it's an opportunity to bring us into a world where guys as producers and a terrifically
talented guy as a writer who I think are going to take the audience on an interesting, fun and I
would bet funny ride."

However, there will be serious subjects tackled in the show. Werner
compared
Survivor's Remorse to shows like
Roseanne, which dealt with difficult situations with humor interspersed with serious
moments.